EkKBeftXIpl bwoxjtHz • March 16, 2012

My name is Aron Adler.

I am 25 years old, was born in Brooklyn NY, and raised in Efrat Israel.


Though very busy, I don’t view my life as unusual. Most of the time, I, am, just another Israeli citizen. During the day I work as a paramedic in Magen, David Adom, Israel’s national EMS service. At night, I’m in my first year, of law school. I got married this October and am starting a new chapter of, life together with my wonderful wife Shulamit.


15-20 days out of every year, I’m called up to the Israeli army to do my ‚ reserve duty. I serve as a paramedic in an IDF paratrooper unit.


My ‚ squad ‚ is made up of others like me; people living normal lives who step up to ‚ serve whenever responsibility calls. The oldest in my squad is 58, a father ‚ of four girls and grandfather of two; there are two bankers, one engineer, ‚  ‚ a holistic healer, and my 24 year old commander who is still trying to figure out what to do with his life. Most of the year we are just normal ‚ people living our lives, but for 15-20 days each year we are soldiers on the front lines preparing for a war that we hope we never have to fight.


This year, our reserve unit was stationed on the border between Israel, ‚ Egypt and the Gaza Strip in an area called “Kerem Shalom.” Above and beyond ‚ the “typical” things for which we train ““ war, terrorism, border ‚ infiltration, etc., – this year we were confronted by a new challenge.


Several years ago, a trend started of African refugees crossing the ‚ Egyptian border from Sinai into Israel to seek asylum from the atrocities in Darfur.


What started out as a small number of men, women and children fleeing from ‚ the machetes of the Janjaweed and violent fundamentalists to seek a better ‚ life elsewhere, turned into an organized industry of human trafficking. In ‚ return for huge sums of money, sometimes entire life savings paid to Bedouin “guides,” these refugees are promised to be transported from Sudan, ‚ Eritrea, and other African countries through Egypt and the Sinai ‚  desert, ‚ into the safe haven of Israel.


We increasingly hear horror stories of the atrocities these refugees suffer ‚ on their way to freedom. They are subject to, and victims of extortion, rape, murder, and even organ theft, their bodies left to rot in the desert. ‚ Then, if lucky, after surviving this gruesome experience whose prize is freedom, when only a barbed wire fence separates them from Israel and their ‚ goal, they must go through the final death run and try to evade the ‚  bullets ‚ of the Egyptian soldiers stationed along the border. Egypt’s soldiers are ‚ ordered to shoot to kill anyone trying to cross the border OUT of Egypt ‚  ‚ and ‚ into Israel. It’s an almost nightly event.


For those who finally get across the border, the first people they ‚ encounter are Israeli soldiers, people like me and those in my unit, who are tasked with a primary mission of defending the lives of the Israeli people. On one side of the border soldiers shoot to kill. On the other ‚ side, ‚ they know they will be treated with more respect than in any of the ‚ countries they crossed to get to this point.

The region where it all happens is highly sensitive and risky from a ‚ security point of view, an area stricken with terror at every turn. It’s just a few miles south of the place where Gilad Shalit was kidnapped. And ‚ yet the Israeli soldiers who are confronted with these refugees do it not with rifles aimed at them, but with a helping hand and an open heart. The ‚ refugees are taken to a nearby IDF base, given clean clothes, a hot ‚  drink, ‚ food and medical attention. They are finally safe.


Even though I live Israel and am aware through media reports of the events ‚ that take place on the Egyptian border, I never understood the ‚ intensity ‚  and complexity of the scenario until I experienced it myself.


In the course of the past few nights, I have witnessed much. At 9:00 PM ‚ last night, the first reports came in of gunfire heard from the Egyptian border. Minutes later, IDF scouts spotted small groups of people trying to ‚ get across the fence. In the period of about one hour, we picked up 13 ‚  men ‚  ‚ – cold, barefoot, dehydrated – some wearing nothing except underpants. ‚  ‚ Their bodies were covered with lacerations and other wounds. We ‚  gathered ‚ them in a room, gave them blankets, tea and treated their wounds. I don’t ‚ speak a word of their language, but the look on their faces said it all ‚  and ‚ reminded me once again why I am so proud to be a Jew and an Israeli. ‚  Sadly, ‚ it was later determined that the gunshots we heard were deadly, killing ‚ three others fleeing for their lives.

During the 350 days a year when I am not on active duty, when I am just ‚ > another man trying to get by, the people tasked with doing this amazing job, this amazing deed, the people witnessing these events, are mostly ‚ young Israeli soldiers just out of high school, serving their compulsory ‚ time in the IDF, some only 18 years old.


The refugees flooding into Israel are a heavy burden on our small country. More than 100,000 refugees have fled this way, and hundreds more cross the ‚ border every month. The social, economic, and humanitarian issues ‚  created ‚ by this influx of refugees are immense. There are serious security ‚ consequences for Israel as well. This influx of African refugees poses a crisis for Israel. Israel has yet to come up with the solutions required to ‚ deal with this crisis effectively, balancing its’ sensitive social, ‚ economic, and security issues, at the same time striving to care for the ‚ refugees.


I don’t have the answers to these complex problems which desperately need ‚ to be resolved. I’m not writing these words with the intention of ‚  taking a ‚ political position or a tactical stand on the issue.


I am writing to tell you and the entire world what’s really happening ‚ down ‚ here on the Egyptian/Israeli border. And to tell you that despite all ‚  the ‚ serious problems created by this national crisis, these refugees have no ‚ reason to fear us. Because they know, as the entire world needs to ‚  know, ‚ that Israel has not shut its eyes to their suffering and pain. Israel has ‚ not looked the other way. The State of Israel has put politics aside ‚  to ‚ take the ethical and humane path as it has so often done before, in every ‚ instance of human suffering and natural disasters around the globe.


We Jews ‚ know only too well about suffering and pain. The Jewish people have been ‚ there. We have been the refugees and the persecuted so many times, over ‚ thousands of years, all over the world.


Today, when African refugees flood our borders in search of freedom and ‚ better lives, and some for fear of their lives, it is particularly noteworthy how Israel deals with them, despite the enormous strain it puts ‚ on our country on so many levels. Our young and thriving Jewish people ‚  and ‚ country, built from the ashes of the Holocaust, do not turn their backs on ‚ humanity. Though I already knew that, this week I once again ‚  experienced it ‚ firsthand. I am overwhelmed with emotion and immensely proud to be a member ‚ of this nation.


With love of Israel,

Aron Adler writing from the Israel/Gaza/Egyptian border

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